Joe Biden needled Trump and raised $26m at New York fundraiser as protesters gathered outside – live

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Sitting next to his former boss Barack Obama and Democratic predecessor Bill Clinton, Joe Biden talked about lots last night in a conversation moderated by comedian Stephen Colbert.

That included politically perilous topics such as his advanced age. At 81, he is the oldest president to have ever served, and polls indicate that voters are concerned about his fitness for the job.

Reverting to the carefree tone he took when discussing the subject at his State of the Union address earlier this month, Biden said, “one thing age does bring is a little bit of wisdom. And I know I don’t look much over forty, I know that.”

Stephen Colbert, left, presided over the conversation with, from left to right, Joe Biden, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton.
Stephen Colbert, left, presided over the conversation with, from left to right, Joe Biden, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

He also floated the theory that many Republicans don’t actually want to support the policies that his rival Donald Trump plans to put before them. “The thing that disturbs me most is I don’t know what it is that my predecessor has on these guys. Why they’re not stepping up more like Liz Cheney and others because, I know, I know that they don’t like a lot of what’s going on,” Biden said, accusing Trump of wanting to cut Social Security and tighten abortion access nationwide.

“This last guy that I ran against, and am running against again this time … his ideas are from the 18th, 19th century,” he said.

Key events

To remind readers of Russia’s continued detention of their reporter Evan Gershkovich, the Wall Street Journal has left their front page today largely blank:

“His Story Should Be Here”

Today’s front page of The Wall Street Journal.

One year stolen. We will not rest until Evan Gershkovich is free.#IStandWithEvan pic.twitter.com/SVsezqwzS7

— WSJ Communications (@WSJPR) March 29, 2024

And sent users of their mobile app a push alert to where his journalism should be:

Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich stands in a glass cage in a courtroom in Moscow, Russia, on 19 September 2023.
Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich stands in a glass cage in a courtroom in Moscow, Russia, on 19 September 2023. Photograph: Dmitry Serebryakov/AP

In a rare joint statement, the Democratic and Republican leaders of the Senate and House of Representatives have condemned Russia’s detention of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, and called for his release.

“Evan Gershkovich, an American citizen and reporter for The Wall Street Journal, has now spent a year wrongfully detained by Putin’s government. We continue to condemn his baseless arrest, fabricated charges, and unjust imprisonment,” reads the statement from Democratic Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer, Republican House speaker Mike Johnson, Republican Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell and Democratic House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries.

They continue:

Forty-five years ago, Evan’s parents, Ella and Mikhail Gershkovich, found refuge in the United States after fleeing the Soviet Union. Today, Putin is restoring Soviet-style control through repression at home and aggression abroad.

On the anniversary of Evan Gershkovich’s captivity, we reaffirm the importance of his work. Journalism is not a crime, and reporters are not bargaining chips. The Kremlin’s attempts to silence Evan and intimidate other Western reporters will not impede the pursuit of truth.

We repeat our call for the Russian government to release Evan, Paul Whelan, and others it has wrongfully detained without further delay.

Where Joe Biden goes, pro-Palestine protesters follow.

This has been increasingly the case after the Biden administration gave its (perhaps waning) support to Israel following its invasion of Gaza. During his fundraiser at New York’s Radio City Music Hall last night, Biden was interrupted five times by protesters, while more gathered outside:

Pro-Palestine protesters outside Radio City Music Hall.
Pro-Palestine protesters outside Radio City Music Hall. Photograph: Andrea Renault/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock
Protesters in support of Palestine outside the fundraiser.
Protesters in support of Palestine outside the fundraiser. Photograph: Andrea Renault/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock
Police guard the venue.
Police guard the venue. Photograph: Andrea Renault/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock

Sitting next to his former boss Barack Obama and Democratic predecessor Bill Clinton, Joe Biden talked about lots last night in a conversation moderated by comedian Stephen Colbert.

That included politically perilous topics such as his advanced age. At 81, he is the oldest president to have ever served, and polls indicate that voters are concerned about his fitness for the job.

Reverting to the carefree tone he took when discussing the subject at his State of the Union address earlier this month, Biden said, “one thing age does bring is a little bit of wisdom. And I know I don’t look much over forty, I know that.”

Stephen Colbert, left, presided over the conversation with, from left to right, Joe Biden, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP

He also floated the theory that many Republicans don’t actually want to support the policies that his rival Donald Trump plans to put before them. “The thing that disturbs me most is I don’t know what it is that my predecessor has on these guys. Why they’re not stepping up more like Liz Cheney and others because, I know, I know that they don’t like a lot of what’s going on,” Biden said, accusing Trump of wanting to cut Social Security and tighten abortion access nationwide.

“This last guy that I ran against, and am running against again this time … his ideas are from the 18th, 19th century,” he said.

Good morning, US politics blog reader. Joe Biden went to New York City yesterday on a mission: raise a massive amount of money for his presidential campaign in a city that’s long been fertile territory for Democrats. The president accomplished his mission last night at Radio City Music Hall, bringing in what his campaign said was more than $26m in a moderated conversation alongside Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, where Biden said Donald Trump’s ideas “are from the 18th, 19th century”. The president aims to continue raking it in today, spending the morning holding another fundraiser in the city, before flying back to Washington DC. But as has happened repeatedly in recent months, Biden was interrupted during the event by protesters opposed to his support for Israel. Despite the fact that the Biden administration allowed passage earlier this week of a UN security council resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza and one of his top allies in Congress has broken with its government, the disruptions were a sign that he may have a ways to go in winning back voters disaffected over his policy towards what America considers its top Middle East ally.

Here’s what else we are watching today: